Of Planting
“7. When    the seedling    rice    has been    in  the nursery long    enough, and the fields
are clean   and ready   for planting    (which  will    be  about   the month   of  Safar,  or
August) the seedlings   are pulled  up  and tied    together    with    strips  of  dried
palas^196   leaves  into    bundles of  the size    known   as  sachekak    (i.e.   the space
enclosed    by  the thumb   and the index   finger  when    their   ends    meet).  If  the roots
and blades  are long    the ends    can be  clipped a   little, and the roots   are then    steeped
in  manure. This    manure  is  made    of  buffalo bones   burnt   with    chaff   till    they    are
thoroughly  calcined,   and then    pounded fine,   passed  through a   sieve   and mixed
with    mud:    that    is  the best    kind    of  manure  for rice-planting,  and is  known   as
‘stock  manure.’    (It can also    be  applied by  merely  scattering  it  in  the fields. In
that    case,   after   cutting off the ends    of  the blades, the seedlings   are planted,    and
afterwards, when    they    are green   again   and appear  to  be  thriving,   the manure  is
scattered   over    the whole   field.  There   are some    places, too,    where   no  manure  at
all is  used    because of  the perennial   richness    of  the soil.)
“Afterwards the seedlings   are allowed to  remain  exposed to  the air for about   two
nights, and then    taken   to  the field   to  be  planted.    The bundles are broken  up, and
bunches of  four    or  five    plants  together    are planted at  intervals   of  a   span    all over
the different   plots   till    all are filled  up. If  there   are very    many    plots,  ten or  fifteen
female  labourers   can be  engaged to  assist  in  planting,   and likewise    in  pulling up
the seedlings,  at  a   wage    of  four    cents   for every   hundred bundles.
